"... In an age where digital technology has given rise to a proliferation of filmmakers with nothing but commercial dreams in their heads for their moribund creations, this remodernist group of filmmakers is dreaming and believing in something else. And actually doing it. In Passing is an intriguing and exquisite work..." - Bill Mousoulis, Senses of Cinema
Watch "In Passing" here for a limited time.
In Passing from Cine Foundation International on Vimeo.


"It is the tunnel vision, the burrowing into specific obsessions, of In Passing's individual filmmakers, combined with the broad scope of the collaborative form, that constitute the film's unique allure."

                                                   --John A. Riley, Bright Lights Film Journal
                                                                        Read the full review HERE


"The film is neither a fully experimental work, nor a movie fixated on classic narrative; rather, In Passing explores the passing of time and the relation of time to cinematic space. Often focusing on intimate yet small details – the table top exploration of a crustacean, the patter of rain on a window, cats at play, the ocean shot from a moving car, a couple looking into a camera knowing that the film they are making will fail – and finding something lyrically poignant and even personal within these transient moments. There are scenes in which people seem to vanish, no longer seen on screen, yet the space they once occupied still resonates with their echoes, moving through the poetic sublime."

-- Jack Sargeant, FilmInk Magazine
Read the full article HERE































-

News

-- In Passing screens at The Short Circuit Film Festival in Sofia, Bulgaria on August 9, 15, 17


--We are so proud to announce that the amiable and talented champion of no budget films, Kentucker Audley will be 'releasing' In Passing for a limited time on his awesome site No Budge Films. Watch it for free starting May 31st, 2012!

--New episode of the exceptional podcast program Syndromes and a Cinema is all about In Passing and the Remodernist Film Manifesto. LISTEN HERE. Subscribe on iTunes HERE

--FilmInk, Australia's biggest movie magazine, has published an article by Jack Sargeant on the Remodernist Film Movement and In Passing. Read it HERE
--In Passing will have its World Premiere at the Quad Cinema in New York City on November 13, 2011 (showtime: 1:25pm) as part of the International Film Festival Manhattan. More info to come!


--Bill Mousoulis, Founding editor, Senses of Cinema journal, on In Passing:

"IN PASSING is an admirable work. At times it feels like experimental cinema, or an art installation, or minimalist narrative work, or cryptic documentary work, but it is none of these things, in a way it is beyond them. As an omnibus film, the seven pieces are unified - their exploration of the passing of time, the passage of space, and, more importantly, the "passing" (the imagining, the expression, the extinguishing) of cinema.

The filmmakers are working under a "remodernist" designation, complete with a set of 15 "rules". So it's an attempt to renew cinema, to find new forms - as many of the modernist filmmakers of the '60s wanted to do. (And did.) In an age where digital technology has given rise to a proliferation of filmmakers with nothing but commercial dreams in their heads for their moribund creations, this remodernist group of filmmakers is dreaming and believing in something else. And actually doing it. IN PASSING is an intriguing and exquisite work, filled with many delightful elements."
Seven filmmakers from The Netherlands, Ireland, Iran and America, have come together, inspired by Jesse Richardsʼ 2008 Remodernist Film Manifesto, to create a collaborative feature film called “In Passing”.

In his manifesto, Richards calls for a new authenticity in cinema, a collective embracing of our flaws, a mass turning inwards. The inspired response from filmmakers all over the world sparked the idea of bringing a selection of them together to each contribute a short film that would all be combined to form a joint feature with no common theme except the inspiration sprouted from Richardʼs 15 point message. The results were distinctly unique yet connected, creating not a narrative, but the unfolding of a collective essence. The finished film is a unique cinematic experience; transfixing, beautiful, meditative and at times deeply personal.

The filmmakers
are: Heidi Beaver (US), Christopher Michael Beer (US), Dean Kavanagh (Ireland), Roy Rezaali (Netherlands), Rouzbeh Rashidi (Iran, Ireland), Peter Rinaldi (US), Kate Shults (US)

Bill Mousoulis from Senses of Cinema was the first to write about the film: “...In an age where digital technology has given rise to a proliferation of filmmakers with nothing but commercial dreams in their heads for their moribund creations, this Remodernist group of filmmakers is dreaming and believing in something else. And actually doing it...IN PASSING is an intriguing and exquisite work..."

Remodernist Film Manifesto

By Jesse Richards

1. Art manifestos, despite the good intentions of the writer should always “be taken with a grain of salt” as the cliché goes, because they are subject to the ego, pretensions, and plain old ignorance and stupidity of their authors. This goes all the way back to the Die Brücke manifesto of 1906, and continues through time to this one that youʼre reading now. A healthy wariness of manifestos is understood and encouraged. However, the ideas put forth here are meant sincerely and with the hope of bringing inspiration and change to others, as well as to myself.

2. Remodernism seeks a new spirituality in art. Therefore, remodernist film seeks a new spirituality in cinema. Spiritual film does not mean films about Jesus or the Buddha. Spiritual film is not about religion. It is cinema concerned with humanity and an understanding of the simple truths and moments of humanity. Spiritual film is really ALL about these moments.

3. Cinema could be one of the perfect methods of creative expression, due to the ability of the filmmaker to sculpt with image, sound and the feeling of time. For the most part, the creative possibilities of cinema have been squandered. Cinema is not a painting, a novel, a play, or a still photograph. The rules and methods used to create cinema should not be tied to these other creative endeavors. Cinema should NOT be thought of as being “all about telling a story”. Story is a convention of writing, and should not necessarily be considered a convention of filmmaking.

4. The Japanese ideas of wabi-sabi (the beauty of imperfection) and mono no aware (the awareness of the transience of things and the bittersweet feelings that accompany their passing), have the ability to show the truth of existence, and should always be considered when making the remodernist film.

5. An artificial sense of “perfection” should never be imposed on a remodernist film. Flaws should be accepted and even encouraged. To that end, a remodernist filmmaker should consider the use of film, and particularly film like Super-8mm and 16mm because these mediums entail more of a risk and a requirement to leave things up to chance, as opposed to digital video. Digital video is for people who are afraid of, and unwilling to make mistakes.** Video leads to a boring and sterile cinema. Mistakes and failures make your work honest and human.***

6. Film, particularly Super-8mm film, has a rawness, and an ability to capture the poetic essence of life, that video has never been able to accomplish.***

7. Intuition is a powerful tool for honest communication. Your intuition will always tell you if you are making something honest, so use of intuition is key in all stages of remodernist filmmaking.

8. Any product or result of human creativity is inherently subjective, due to the beliefs, biases and knowledge of the person creating the work. Work that attempts to be objective will always be subjective, only instead it will be subjective in a dishonest way. Objective films are inherently dishonest. Stanley Kubrick, who desperately and pathetically tried to make objective films, instead made dishonest and boring films.

9. The remodernist film is always subjective and never aspires to be objective.

10. Remodernist film is not Dogme ʼ95. We do not have a pretentious checklist that must be followed precisely. This manifesto should be viewed only as a collection of ideas and hints whose author may be mocked and insulted at will.

11. The remodernist filmmaker must always have the courage to fail, even hoping to fail, and to find the honesty, beauty and humanity in failure.

12. The remodernist filmmaker should never expect to be thanked or congratulated. Instead, insults and criticism should be welcomed. You must be willing to go ignored and overlooked.

13. The remodernist filmmaker should be accepting of their influences, and should have the bravery to copy from them in their quest for understanding of themselves.

14. Remodernist film should be a stripped down, minimal, lyrical, punk kind of filmmaking, and is a close relative to the No-Wave Cinema that came out of New Yorkʼs Lower East Side in the 1970ʼs.

15. Remodernist film is for the young, and for those who are older but still have the courage to look at the world through eyes as if they are children.

** The only exceptions to Point 5 about video are Harris Smith and Peter Rinaldi; to my mind they are the only people who have made honest and worthwhile use of this medium. (Aug. 2008) ***The position on digital/video has changed since this manifesto was written in 2008- the group is inclusive toward use of any motion picture format.

Links

Review in Bright Lights Film Journal by John A Riley

Review of The Remodernist Shorts Program at Cafe Kino By Veronique Martin

Essays on Remodernist Film in Mungbeing Magazine -- October 4, 2009

Cinema with Soul – FilmInk Magazine – February 25 2010


Roger Ebert tweets about the Remodernist Film Manifesto – June 10, 2010

Reuter’s Article mentioning Bela Tarr's "remodernist cinema"—February 16, 2011

The Filmmakers


Heidi Beaver's last film "Lost" won Best Dramatic Short at the Long Island film festival in 1996. She lives in NYC and works, under a pen name, as an illustrator. "Trust" is her return to the moving image.



Christopher Michael Beer received his summa cum laude degree in film theory and criticism from the University of Minnesota. He also studied production at FAMU in Prague, CZ, under the guidance of Academy Award winning Czech filmmakers. His work, which includes two full length features concerning human rights, has been screened in Palm Springs, Boston, Minneapolis, New York City, Prague, Bordeaux, and Istanbul. He currently lives in Brooklyn, NY, where in addition to guest lecturing at NYU on screenwriting, he works on a variety of film and television productions, most notably with Industrial Light and Magic on The Avengers. He has his family and teachers to thank for his interest and continuing pursuit in film, not to mention the friends and helpful strangers who have helped him along the way.
Dean Kavanagh is an independent, avant-garde, low/no- budget filmmaker from Ireland. While being an active filmmaker from an early age, Dean began to favor more “visual stories” and from 2006 onwards he began to reduce conventional narrative elements.
In 2008 Dean was discovered by independent Iranian filmmaker Rouzbeh Rashidi. From that point Dean concentrated on experimental filmmaking. During the period 2008-2010 he made 15 shorts as part of the Dublin based Experimental Film Society established by Rashidi.
Dean now makes film entirely independently and his films could be described as visual with attention to the image/sound relationship. They feature non-professional actors, natural/available light and are shot with little to no crew and no budgets.
A selection of his works has been screened, had official selections and won awards nationally.
Dean holds a degree in Media Arts, and has also composed music for short films and a collection of his own experimental/concept projects. He was born in Dublin, Ireland and currently resides in County Wicklow.
Rouzbeh Rashidi (born in Tehran, 1980) is an Iranian independent filmmaker. He has been making films since 2000 when he founded the Experimental Film Society in Tehran. Since then, he has worked completely apart from any mainstream conceptions of filmmaking. He strives to escape the stereotypes of conventional storytelling and instead roots his cinematic style in a poetic interaction of image and sound.
He intentionally rejects scriptwriting, or any other form of written pre-planning.
His films are inspired by and constructed around images, locations, characters and their immediate situations. The stylistic elements that make up his distinctively personal film language include the use of natural light, non-professional actors, slow paced rhythms, abstract plots, static shots and minimal dialogue. He employs a wide range of different formats and devices to make his films, including video, Super-8mm, webcam and mobile phone cameras. His consistently low-budget work is entirely self-funded and made with complete creative freedom.

Rouzbeh Rashidi has directed and produced forty short films. Since 2008, he has focused on feature projects, making several full length films. His films has been shown in many film festivals, galleries and showcases throughout the world such as in Iran, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Wales, UAE, USA, Hungary, India, Italy, Greece, France, England and Brazil.
Rouzbeh Rashidi is the recipient of Irish Arts Council Film Project Award for his experimental feature film project HE (2012).
He moved to Ireland in 2004 and currently lives and works in Dublin. More info: www.rouzbehrashidi.com

Roy Rezaäli is a The Hague-based filmmaker dedicated to Super8 productions. This resulted in an ongoing event ‘Shoot8!’ that promotes the use of Super8 in film productions, started in October 2010 at the Shoot-Me Film Festival in The Hague. Since 2011 he has broadened the Super8 filmmaking activities to his homeland Suriname. Together with other Super8 filmmakers they are joined in the international collective Chill'm Guerrilla Cinema (CGS) established in 2004.
The method of filmmaking CGC advocates is pretty simple. Super 8 cams, real locations, non-actors, no pre-written dialogues, filming in one take, not too much work with editing, no superficial after-effects, focus on self-financing, usage of self-made music and/or produced by beginning/independent musicians. In 2006 Roy started to write for his first feature film ‘Agga Tori’ (A Tale From The Hague) which he pitched to Roger Corman. This film is still in-production and will be shot in The Hague, Holland and Paramaribo, Suriname.
2009 was a key year when a strategic alliance was established between Jesse Richards’ Remodernist Film initiative and CGC. The reason for this was that in search of auteur driven films shot on super 8, this was the only entity nowadays in the whole world that also advocates to shoot on super8, just like CGC. The trigger for this alliance was the mesmerizing short ‘Shooting at the moon’. That movie really connected CGC with Remodernist Film and after agreeing with the Remodernist Manifesto as a whole, a partnership was started.
The first try-out on Super8 by Roy was ‘Tulip’. This short impression film displays The Hague through his eyes and was selected to be added in the list of Remodernist films.
A very promising Super8 project was initiated by CGC between 21 filmmakers in 2011.
Jesse Richards (Producer) (born Bridgeport, CT. USA 1975) is a filmmaker, photographer, artist, model and actor. He has been making films off and on since the early 1990’s.
In the Summer of 2001 he became a member of the international art movement, Stuckism. He organized several international art exhibitions of Stuckist and Remodernist work during that time including The War on Bush
in New Haven, CT. in 2003, as well as the first comprehensive exhibition of work from all of the Remodernist groups at CB’s313 in New York City in 2005. Richards also participated as an artist in several major exhibitions with them, including The Stuckists Punk Victorian at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool in 2004 during the Liverpool Biennial, and The Triumph of Stuckism/Symposium on Stuckism at John Moores University in Liverpool during the 2006 Liverpool Biennial. Richards quit the Stuckists in 2006. In 2011 he reteamed with Stuckists Joe Machine and others as a member of The Institute of Collective Remodernism.

Richards is a published photographer, favoring pinhole cameras and lomography. He has collaborated as a photographer in books with Billy Childish, Wolf Howard and others.

As a filmmaker, Richards is the founder of the Remodernist Film Movement and is the author of its manifesto. He has collaborated on projects with filmmakers such as Bill Morrison, Lav Diaz, Amos Poe, Nina Menkes and others. In November 2010 he was a founding member o
f Cine Foundation International, and is on the Board of Directors along with Bela Tarr, Fred Kelemen, Lav Diaz and others.
Peter Rinaldi is an award winning filmmaker based in New York City. He graduated from The School Of Visual Arts (BFA Filmmaking) in 1996. His thesis film "Short Film" won SVA's Dusty Award for outstanding achievement in editing. In 1998 he Produced and Hosted 50 episodes of the MNN cable show "Short Fuse" which showcased short films and their makers, including Bill Morrison and Lynn Hershman Leeson.
In 2000 he switched from 16mm to digital video and has been making digital shorts on a regular basis. In 2006 he created an independent television pilot called “Oh! Be Joyful” which Time Out New York called “One of the top five comedies” at the New York Television Festival, where it premiered. His films have been screened around the world including Anthology Film Archives, Syracuse International Film Festival, The Indie Gathering and The Max Ophuls Film Festival in Germany.
Kate Shults is a filmmaker and writer based in Orlando, Florida. She is currently earning a MFA in film from the University of Central Florida, while working as a Teaching Associate. Having previously attended UCF for her BFA in film, Shults has completed over seven short films and is currently working on a feature-length video. Her feature, When the Alligator Called to Elijah, is scheduled for release in summer of 2012.

Article on Remodernist Film in FilmInk Magazine

Jack Sargeant's article about the Remodernist Film Movement in the November issue of FilmInk, Australia's biggest film magazine.

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Article on Remodernist Film in FilmInk Magazine

Marty Scorsese reading Jack's Article

Jack Sargeant's article about the Remodernist Film Movement in the November issue of FilmInk, Australia's biggest film magazine.

If you can't see pages CLICK HERE

(click on the buttons below each page to zoom in or view in full screen mode)FilmInk Page 1
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Stills from "In Passing"





















Contact

Jesse Richards, Producer

jesse DOT richards DOT film AT gmail DOT com

Peter Rinaldi, Contributor

peter DOT rinaldi AT gmail DOT com

917-410-0757

Podcast about "In Passing" and Remodernist Film


New episode of the exceptional podcast program Syndromes and a Cinema is all about In Passing and the Remodernist Film Manifesto.
LISTEN HERE
Subscribe on iTunes HERE



"The film is neither a fully experimental work, nor a movie fixated on classic narrative; rather, In Passing explores the passing of time and the relation of time to cinematic space. Often focusing on intimate yet small details – the table top exploration of a crustacean, the patter of rain on a window, cats at play, the ocean shot from a moving car, a couple looking into a camera knowing that the film they are making will fail – and finding something lyrically poignant and even personal within these transient moments. There are scenes in which people seem to vanish, no longer seen on screen, yet the space they once occupied still resonates with their echoes, moving through the poetic sublime."
-- Jack Sargeant, FilmInk Magazine
Read the full article HERE



































x

Credits

Produced By Jesse Richards

“Trust”
Written, Directed, Photographed and Edited By Heidi Beaver
With Heidi Beaver and Peter Rinaldi

“RUNES”

Cast: Atoosa Pour Hosseini
Idea, Sound, Edit & Director: Rouzbeh Rashidi
Produced by: Experimental Film Society Dublin / Ireland 2011


"Detritus"

Cast: Leon Kavanagh, Julia Gelezova, Paul Dowling

director, camera, sound, editor
Dean Kavanagh

shot on location in Dublin and Wicklow, Ireland.


“Neighbors”

Featuring Jameson Lynch
Camera and Editing by Kate Shults
Score by Jameson Lynch
Sound Design by Kate Shults
   
Shot on Flip Video in Orlando, FL   
 
Special Thanks:   
Christopher Harris   
Lindsay Denniberg   
Brett Walsh   
John Goshorn   
Stephen Schlow   
Barbara

“Debt"

Characters:
Ron (Real name Ron Noest)
Miguel (Real name Juan Hendriks)

Cinematography, edited and directed by:
Roy Rezaäli

"Original Source (instrumental)"
Performed by J.C. & Anphibius
Recorded, arranged & produced by Anphibius at Two Bells, Brooklyn, New York
Mastered by Alan Douches at West West Side Music, Tenafly, New Jersey
 © 2004 BMI/ASCAP
Used with permission


"metronome"

a falling up sky picture

Written and Directed by
Christopher Michael Beer

Produced By
Mary Beidler Gearen
Nicholas Kapanke

Director of Photography
Nicholas Kapanke

Grandfather
George Val Beer

Grandson
Liam Maves

nurse
Mary Beidler Gearen

Family
Scott Maves
Barbara Heinz
Luke Coverdale


Casting
Mary Beidler Gearen

Production Manager
Matthew Cody Brandes

8mm Sequence
Khurrem Karelia Gold

Production Assistant
Luke Coverdale

Catering
Third Place Productions

Hair
James Camuche

Wardrobe Supplied By
Tatters Inc.

Camera and equipment supplied by
Cinequipt, Minneapolis
Chris Beales

Filmed on location at
The Kenwood
Courtesy of Karen Edberg

‘Prelude, Op. 28 VII A’
Written By Frederic Chopin
Performed By The Aquarium Saints
Courtesy of Matthew Reinhart

Special Thanks
Dad and Mom
Mun Kulta
Grandma
Nanny Und Kurtl
Didi and Rick
Taipan
Miss Mary
Nick Mah Brotha
Matty B.
Liam and Luke, for giving me your time
Karen and everyone at the Kenwood
Chris and Cinequipt


“Almost”
 By Peter Rinaldi
with Melissa King and Peter Rinaldi